Whether you see them or not, you’re taking a swim with plankton.
These tiny organisms found near the ocean’s surface are more numerous than you imagine. Some are permanent plankton that will spend their entire existence riding the currents. Others are just going with the flow until they develop into full-fledged swimmers.
“Many species of fishes start out life as planktonic larvae, suspended in the water column, unable to propel themselves, and at the whim of wind and oceanic currents for their dispersal,” says John Sparks, curator in the Department of Ichthyology who’s overseeing the upcoming exhibition Unseen Oceans, which opens on March 12. “These larval fishes are temporary members of the zooplankton that, in turn, feed on smaller plankton.”
Among the soon-to-be-swimmers: the blue marlin, Makaira nigricans, one of the world’s most iconic game fishes, which can grow to weigh more than 1,000 pounds. Blue marlins start their lives as humble, millimeter-long eggs that, when fertilized, develop into slightly less tiny larvae and spend their early days floating among other zooplankton.
If they survive long enough—and avoid being eaten—another subset of part-time plankton settle down—way, way down. These benthic species, as they’re known, sink out of the water column and down to the seafloor. Sea stars (you may know them as starfish) and sea urchins, for example, get their start as drifting planktonic larvae before moving to deeper haunts.